Charlie Huston
Charlie Huston is a former actor who lives in Manhattan with his wife, the actress Virginia Louise
Smith. He is the author of the Henry Thompson trilogy (Caught Stealing, Six Bad Things, and
A Dangerous Man) and the first Joe Pitt Casebook, Already Dead.

Scott Brick once again breathes "life" into the character of Joe Pitt in this sequel to Charlie
Huston's Already Dead.

Joe is back to his old tricks, trying to stay flush with the blood and the bling, while also keeping a low profile
with the other Vyrus infected factions. One night while hanging out at his favorite bar, Joe comes into contact
with another victim of the Vyrus who appears to be wigged out on some kind of new drug called Anathema. Since
the Vyrus cancels out every other stimulant, this gets Joe's attention. Thus begins a twisted tale of drugs,
betrayal and city wide domination. Joe, in trying to stay afloat, takes a job with Terry of the Society. Terry
wants Joe to find the source of the new drug.

In his quest, Joe is drawn into the middle of a war between rival gangs headed by Digger, a charmingly vicious
and frightening gangbanger and Papa, a Farrakahan-esque, fez-wearing overlord. With the assistance by surprising
allies, Joe is taken to the source of the Anathema. In the introduction of new players, Joe discovers the
Anathema's horrifying secret.

At every turn, Joe feels that someone is directing his every move and they do not have his well-being at
heart. Is it the Coalition, which has been gunning for him since his last run-in with them, or is it the
Enclave still trying to convince him that he is one of them? Or is there a new puppeteer on the scene pulling
Joe's strings?

Charlie Huston creates a powerful and compelling continuation of the Joe Pitt saga. Mr. Huston accomplishes
the rare feat of making a sequel better than the original story. The twist and turns are the quality of which
Machiavelli would be proud.

Scott Brick stretches his considerable vocal muscles with the diversity of each character. Covering a range
of socioeconomic and cultural dialects, Mr. Brick brings the feel of the streets to life with his portrayal of
Digger as the street savvy, hard-edged gangster but with the dimension of a real person not just a
caricature. His variety makes each character whole and distinct. Both Mr. Huston and Mr. Brick create
the width and breadth of the amazing amalgamation that is New York City.